Identifying the normative challenges posed by technology’s ‘soft’ impacts
Author(s) -
Tsjalling Swierstra
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
etikk i praksis - nordic journal of applied ethics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.117
H-Index - 8
eISSN - 1890-4009
pISSN - 1890-3991
DOI - 10.5324/eip.v9i1.1838
Subject(s) - normative , environmental ethics , emerging technologies , sociology , engineering ethics , relativism , epistemology , political science , law and economics , positive economics , law , economics , computer science , engineering , philosophy , artificial intelligence
In this paper I argue that we can no longer afford to ignore technology’s so-called ‘soft’ impacts, as this type of impact is becoming increasingly prominent in affluent societies where people have sufficient resources to pursue self-realization and where technologies are becoming more and more ‘intimate’ as they pervade our life world. These soft impacts come with their own type of normative challenges. The first challenge is to acknowledge the mutual shaping of technology and morality that causes soft impacts to be fundamentally morally ambiguous. The second challenge is to anticipate soft impacts, which requires a rich and thick description of our morally laden current practices in the light of plausible technomoral change provoked by emerging technologies. The third and last challenge is to avoid both relativism and foundationalism, by opting for an open and learning attitude vis à vis the ways new and emerging technologies put our current morals into question.
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